207 S.W. 514 | Tex. | 1918
This was an action by the widow and three children of Thos. A. Pope to recover of the Kansas City, Mexico Orient Railway Company of Texas damages for the death of Thos. A. Pope while engaged in the railway company's service as a locomotive engineer, the death being alleged to have resulted from the negligence of a conductor in the employ of the railway company, in giving a certain signal.
The amended original petition, on which the case was tried, did not allege whether the railway company was engaged in interstate or intrastate commerce at the time Pope received the injuries causing his death, or whether Pope was then employed in interstate or intrastate commerce.
The amended original answer on which the case was tried expressly reserved all of the railway company's rights under its overruled motion to dismiss and petition to remand the cause to the United States Circuit Court, wherein it was repeatedly averred that Pope's injuries arose while the company was engaged in interstate commerce and while Pope was employed by it in such commerce.
The uncontradicted evidence disclosed that Pope, when injured, was engaged as engineer in switching cars containing freight in process of transportation from Altus, Oklahoma, to the railway company's material yards at Sweetwater, Texas. And there was evidence to the effect that it was because of a signal negligently given by the conductor that a collision occurred between certain moving cars and Pope's engine, whereby he received the injuries which caused his death. *316
The trial court refused the railway company's request for a peremptory charge and submitted the vase to a jury, who returned a verdict for plaintiffs in error for amounts aggregating $25,000 on findings affirming the averments of negligence on the part of the conductor as the proximate cause of Pope's death. The trial court entered a judgment in accordance with the verdict, which was reversed by the Court of Civil Appeals, with instructions to render judgment for the railway company, if the evidence should be the same on another trial, upon two grounds, viz: first, that Pope's death having resulted from injuries received while he was employed by the railway company in interstate commerce, only his personal representative was entitled to recover; and, second, that the case proven did not support the case plead, Chief Justice Conner expressing no opinion on the latter question.
Most of the propositions urged by plaintiffs in error complain of the ruling that only a personal representative could recover on the facts developed by the evidence. The case of St. Louis, San Francisco Texas Railway Company v. Seale is decisive that the switching between the station at Sweetwater and the railway company's material yards "was as much a part of the interstate transportation as was the movement across the State line," and that "the right of recovery, if any, was in the personal representative of the deceased, and no one else could maintain the action."
Plaintiffs in error also complain of the action of the Court of Civil Appeals in directing the District Court to enter a judgment for the railway company, should there be no change in the evidence. On the other hand, defendant in error asks that final judgment be rendered here in its favor on the two following grounds: First, that the uncontradicted evidence acquits it of negligence and charges the deceased with the assumption of the risk of his death; and, second, that no personal representative of Thos. A. Pope can now maintain a suit against the railway company for damages for his death, based on the Federal statute, because the same would present a new and different cause of action from that first sued on, and would he hatred by limitation.
We have considered the facts in evidence and find that the question was for the jury as to whether the negligence alleged on the part of the conductor was the proximate cause of Pope's death; and, if so, it could not he held, as a conclusion of law, that Pope assumed the risk. Texas N.O. Ry. Co. v. Kelly,
The contention that an amended petition in this case, in behalf of a personal representative of the deceased, alleging that he met his death while employed in interstate commerce, and while the railway company was engaged in such commerce, and making no other change, would introduce a new or different cause of action from that heretofore sued on *317 by plaintiffs in error, appears unfounded under a decision of this court, which has been affirmed by the Supreme Court of the United States.
In St. Louis S.F. Ry. Co. v. Seale,
We think that the final ruling in the Seale case as necessarily adverse to the opinions of the courts who have construed the opinion of the United States Supreme Court in that case, on the first writ of error, together with the opinions in the Wyler case and in the Wulf case, as requiring the holding that an amendment showing that the cause of action arose under the Federal law presented a new or different cause of action from a petition stating a cause of action under the State law, though the facts showing the tort and the damages therefrom were the same in each pleading.
The Wulf case settled the rule that the substitution of the personal representative for dependents introduced no new or different cause of action; and, the opinion, in that case, as well as the later opinion in Seaboard Air Line Ry. Co. v. Renn,
Under the two opinions just mentioned, in order to sustain the contention urged here by the railway company, we would have to say that to correct the omission in the original petition in this case to plead that the company was engaged, and the deceased was employed, in interstate commerce, at the date of the negligence alleged to have caused his death, would be not to correct a mere defective statement of the cause of action arising from the negligence, but would be to introduce a new or different cause of action. It is impossible for us to say that, especially when the United States Supreme Court has said exactly the opposite. For, the case of Illinois Surety Co. v. Peeler,
The statute provides, page 812: "If no suit should be brought by the United States within six months from the completion and final settlement of said contract, then the person or persons supplying the contractor with labor and materials shall, upon application therefor, and furnishing affidavit . . . be furnished with a certified copy of said contract and bond, upon which he or they shall have a right of action, and shall be, and are thereby, authorized to bring suit in the name of the United States. . . . against said contractor and his sureties, and to prosecute the same to final judgment and execution; provided, that . . . it shall not be commenced until after the complete performance of said contract and final settlement thereof, and shall be commenced within one year after the performance and final settlement of said contract, and not later." In Texas Cement Co. v. McCord,
With respect to the amendment of the complaint, it is apparent that as there was an existing right of action under the statute at the time the suit was brought, the case was not within the decision in Texas Cement Co. v. McCord, supra. No new or different cause of action was alleged in the amended complaint.The court merely permitted the defective statement of theexisting right to be corrected by the addition of appropriateallegations, and in this there was no error. Rev. Stats., sec. 954; Missouri, K. T. Ry. Co. v. Wulf,
Seaboard Air Line Ry. Co. v. Koennecke,
The United States Supreme Court appears to have certainly indicated that it would adopt a liberal course in saving substantial rights under the Federal Employers' Liability Act from the bar of limitation, when it referred in its opinion in the Wulf case to McDonald v. Nebraska, 101 Fed., 171, 41 C.C.A., 278, where it declared: "In Lottman v. Barnet, 62 Mo., 159, the Supreme Court said: `Amendments are allowed expressly to save the cause from the statute of limitations, and courts have been liberal in allowing them when the cause of action is not totally different.' . . . There are in the history of the jurisprudence of every country certain epochs which mark the beginning of distinct trains of legal ideas and judicial conceptions of justice. There was a time in England and in this country when the fundamental principles of right and justice which courts were created to uphold and enforce were esteemed of minor importance compared to the quibbles, refinements, and technicalities of special pleadings. In that period the great fundamentals of the law seemed little, and the trifling things great. The courts were not concerned with the merits of a case, but with the mode of stating it. And they adopted so many subtle, artificial, and technical rules governing the statement of actions and defense — for the entire system of special pleading was built up by the judges without the sanction of any written law — that in many cases the whole contention was whether these rules had been observed, and the merits of the case were never reached, and frequently never thought of. Happily for mankind, and for the law itself, that epoch is past in England and in this country, and we now have an epoch in which substance is more considered than form, in which the justice and right of the cause determines its decision, and not some technical error or mistake in the pleadings. In England today the amendment complained of in this case would be allowed quite as a matter of course, and the suggestion that the defendant had gained some advantage by the mistake would not be entertained for a moment. There, as here, every error or mistake in the pleadings which does not affect the substantial right of the adverse party may be cured by amendment; and what is meant by substantial right is a right going to the actual merits of the case. Such a right is not acquired by a mistake or error of pleadings which has not misled the other party to his prejudice. And the prejudice must be actual and irreparable, and not merely theoretical. At this day the party who seeks to profit by an error or mistake in pleading must be able to invoke the principle upon which the law of estoppel is founded."
The Supreme Court of Wisconsin conclusively answered the objections made here to the right to amend, in holding: "The point involved upon this appeal, under the assignments of error, is whether the amended complaint set up a different cause of action than that stated in the original complaint. The contention of the appellant is that there is but one cause of action, and that under the Federal Act, while on the part of the respondent it is insisted that the original complaint set up a cause *321
of action under the State law, and that the amendment changed it from a cause of action under the State law to one under the Federal Act. It is obvious that but one cause of action existed upon all the facts stated in the amended complaint. It is equally obvious that the original complaint was defective in failing to State certain facts going to show that at the time the injury was sustained the parties were engaged in interstate commerce. Nothing stated in the amended complaint was in conflict or inconsistent with the allegations of the original complaint. The cause of action upon which the plaintiff sought to recover damages was defectively stated in the original complaint, and the defects were cured by the amendment. But one cause of action was stated. The amendment related back to the original complaint and became a part of it; hence the statute of limitation was no defense." Curtice v. Chicago N.W.R. Co.,
And, in the Curtice case, the proper distinction was drawn between the right of amendment here involved and that determined in the Wyler case, relied on by defendant in error, when the court said: "We think a careful examination of Union P.R. Co. v. Wyler, supra, will show that it is clearly distinguishable from the instant case. In the Wyler case the amendment changed not only the cause of action, but the nature and substance of the cause of action. The whole discussion in the opinion in the Wyler case goes upon the idea that an entirely new and different cause of action can not be set up by way of amendment, and thus escape the plea of the statute of limitation on the ground that the new cause of action related back to the time of filing the complaint. But the facts in the Wyler case and the reasoning in the opinion have no application to a case where there is but one cause of action which is defectively stated and the defect cured by amendment." L.R.A., 1916D, 318.
The United States Supreme Court, on May 20, 1918, denied a petition for a writ of certiorari to the Supreme Court of Wisconsin to review its judgment in Curtice's case. Chicago
N.W. Ry. Co. v. Curtice,
Under the settled rules of pleading and practice in this State, the right to amend, so as to defeat limitation, when interposed against the cause of action which accrued, under the Federal statute, to the representative of Pope's estate, can not be doubted.
Theuvenin v. Lea,
The principle has been repeatedly applied in Texas to save causes of action from the bar of limitation, when such causes of action were presented *322
in amendments filed after the expiration of the statutory period, notwithstanding the original pleadings, which were filed within the statutory period, were so lacking in averments essential to the statement of a cause of action as to be bad on general demurrer. Western U. Tel. Co. v. Smith,
We are also of the opinion that the defect, now under consideration, in the original petition of plaintiffs in error was cured by the affirmative allegations in the railway company's motion to dismiss and petition to remand to the United States Circuit Court, to the effect that both Pope and the company were engaged in interstate commerce when he was injured. The motion and petition to remand were filed within two years after Pope died, and the company in its last amended answer expressly reserved its every right under the motion and petition.
The law, which must control here, is clearly expressed in Hill v. George,
The following are among the cases which apply the rule stated to facts in all material respects like those of this case: King v. Norfolk S.R. Co. (N.C.),
The judgments of the District Court and of the Court of Civil Appeals will be reversed, and the cause is remanded to the District Court for further proceedings, not inconsistent with this opinion, and without prejudice to such rights as a personal representative of Thos. A. Pope, the deceased, may have.
Reversed and remanded. *323